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El. knyga: Public Opinion in Alabama: Looking Beyond the Stereotypes

  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 19-Nov-2010
  • Leidėjas: Lexington Books
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780739145432
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  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 19-Nov-2010
  • Leidėjas: Lexington Books
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780739145432
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The attitudes of individual citizens play a central role in a democracy. In the United States today, the two major parties are each associated with a broad set of policy positions representing the conservative and liberal political ideologies. The two major parties are becoming increasingly polarized on these ideologies between conservative Republicans and liberal Democrats. This book provides an in-depth examination of public opinion in a single American state, Alabama, to see whether the public opinion of general citizens follows this stereotype of ideological and partisan polarization. Alabama public opinion is analyzed on a fairly wide range of issues, including the quality of public officials, constitutional reform, the role of government in terms of taxes and overall spending, education, health care, religion in public life, crime, and immigration. Alabama is generally perceived as staunchly conservative politically and as a reliably 'red' Republican state in national elections. Yet, public opinion in Alabama is considerably more nuanced and complex than this stereotype in two distinct aspects. First, Alabamians are certainly conservative on many issues, but they are also liberal on a significant number of others. Second, the issue positions of the state's citizens are shaped by three different dynamics in terms of what factors influence specific attitudes. Furthermore a brief analysis of public opinion in the entire United States finds similar patterns. Thus, the current polarization in party politics does not necessarily reflect public opinion in its entirety, suggesting a need to transcend the competing conservative and liberal orthodoxies.

Recenzijos

Using a wealth of data, Clark and Veal offer a new thematic model examining public opinion in Alabama. Topics include, religion, crime, education, immigration and health care. The book is an excellent state level examination of public opinion in Alabama and an excellent addition to the literature. The book would be quite useful in courses on public opinion, political behavior, and southern politics. -- Charles E. Menifield, 2008 Maxine Smith Fellow, University of Memphis

Tables
ix
Chapter 1 Public Opinion and Politics
1(12)
Contradictory Models of Political Attitudes
2(3)
How Alabamians View Their Public Officials
5(5)
Organization of the Book
10(3)
Chapter 2 Support for Constitutional Reform
13(12)
Moderate Support for Rewriting the Alabama State Constitution
14(1)
Stereotypes of Who Supports and Opposes Constitutional Revision
15(1)
Actual Influences on Attitudes about Constitutional Revision
16(3)
Assessing the Simultaneous Effects of the Explanatory Items: The Centrality of the Governmental Activism Dimension
19(1)
Attitudes about Home Rule
20(3)
Public Opinion about Constitutional Reform
23(2)
Chapter 3 Views about the Role of Government
25(18)
Somewhat Contradictory Positions on Tax Issues
25(3)
How Alabamians Divide on Tax Burden and Tax Policy: Support for the Anti-Tax Economic Stress Model
28(4)
The Complex Cleavages over Governor Riley's Tax Referendum
32(2)
Alabamians' Evident Desire for State Services
34(4)
How Alabamians Divide on Government Services: The Prevalence of the Standard Ideological Model
38(3)
The Contradictory Implications of Alabamians' Views about the Role of Government
41(2)
Chapter 4 More Specific Views about Social Services
43(18)
Alabamians' Views on Public Education: Concerns about Both Quality and Traditional Values
43(3)
How Alabamians Divide on Education: Different Dynamics for Different Issues
46(5)
Alabamians' Views about Health Care: Is the Glass Partially Empty or Partially Full?
51(3)
How Alabamians' Divide on Health Care: Medical Problems over Ideology
54(3)
The Conundrum about Education and Health Care in Alabama
57(4)
Chapter 5 Religion and Public Life
61(10)
Alabamians' Views on Religion and Politics: Quite Conservative but with a Couple of Caveats
61(2)
How Alabamians Divide on the Role of Religion in Public Life: Clearly a Cultural Issue
63(4)
A Resistance to Overpoliticizing Some Religious Issues?
67(3)
Religion and Political Life in Alabama
70(1)
Chapter 6 Views about Crime and Immigration
71(14)
Alabamians' Views about Crime: Significant but Not Overwhelming Concern
71(2)
How Alabamians Divide on Crime: An Absence of Significant Relationships
73(3)
Strong Concern over Illegal Immigration
76(5)
Why Alabamians Differ about Illegal Immigration: General Support for the Cultural Issues Ideological Model
81(2)
Immigration and Crime as Issues in Alabama
83(2)
Chapter 7 Public Opinion in Alabama and the United States: Defying the Stereotypes
85(14)
What Do Alabamians Want?
85(5)
The Similar Dynamics in U.S. Public Opinion
90(6)
Public Opinion and the Polarization of U.S. Politics
96(3)
Index 99(2)
About the Authors 101
Cal Clark is professor of political science and the director of the MPA Program at Auburn University. Don-Terry Veal is director of Auburn University's Center for Governmental Services.